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PRESS RELEASE: CASA program offers free CDs to choral students
Written by Chris Tess   
Thursday, 28 August 2008
BOSTON - Tunes To Teens is turning up the volume this fall, making its CD donation program available to high school and junior high school choruses free of charge.

Since 2003, more than 3,000 students have received a cappella CDs donated by singers, educators and fans of unaccompanied vocal music. Usually, chorus directors must contribute $1 per CD to help cover the expenses of the nonprofit program. But this fall, those fees will be waived for school choruses that are new to the program, in an effort to reach more singers in more regions. That means more access to contemporary a cappella, the addictive trend of translating rock, jazz and world music into a captivating all-vocal style.

"A cappella music gets students excited about harmonizing -- and the theory and skill it requires," said Tunes To Teens founder Chris Tess. "This fall, Tunes To Teens will be able to show more students what their voices are capable of."

Choruses with up to 100 students will be eligible for free CDs, if it's their first time participating in the program. For bigger choruses, the first 100 students can receive free recordings, with additional CDs available for $1 per student. Tunes To Teens is a program of the Contemporary A Cappella Society, a California-based nonprofit organization dedicated to fostering contemporary vocal music.

Students and teachers who have participated in the program say it has been an inspiration. "This program is really terrific," said Stephanie of Westbrook Maine, a student whose instructor handed out Tunes To Teens CDs. "Thank you for this brilliant program and the chance for me personally to be exposed to a style of music I've never been introduced to before."

Choir directors say the benefits are immediate. "Our CDs arrived, and it was just like Christmas!" said Jane Vanderhoff of Garden City High School Applied Music Class, in Garden City Kansas. "We will be sharing in class this way: after each student has listened to their CD, they will share one with the class and discuss something about it - why they chose it, style, performer, etc. This is a great idea, and I know it will have the effect I am hoping for - to generate more interest and development of a cappella vocal jazz singing in our school."

This summer, Rolling Stone magazine asked "Is A Cappella Secretly Awesome?" Judging by the excitement of Tunes To Teens participants, the answer is yes.

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Beatbox hits Hanoi youth
Written by CASA NewsLink   
Thursday, 28 August 2008
A young singer recently made an impression on the audience of a reputed television singing contest named Sao Mai – Rendezvous with a beatbox performance, a new “wave of art” that recently hit Vietnamese hip-hop fans.

Nguyen Minh Kien is said to be the pioneer in practicing beatbox in Vietnam. Youth call Kien “the number-one beatboxer of Vietnam”.

Read the full article here.

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Pinellas group keeps alive long tradition of barbershop harmony
Written by CASA NewsLink   
Wednesday, 27 August 2008
At Saturday night's Clearwater Threshers game, Tom Stoffel and his buddies hammed it up during the seventh inning stretch. "We sang Take Me Out to the Ball Game, of course, and Let Me Call You Sweetheart, among others. As long as we're together, we're going to sing,'' said Stoffel, 69, of Largo.

The barbershop-style serenaders are part of the Florida Suncoast Chorus. "Barbershop is four-part, old-fashioned a cappella singing,'' Stoffel said.

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His beat just keeps on going
Written by CASA NewsLink   
Wednesday, 27 August 2008
There’s a reason Scratch, formerly of The Roots, hasn’t played Philly in the last few years. He’s in demand around the world. And when we say around the world, we mean all-the-way-around the world. After all, Dubai isn’t as easy to get to as, say, New Jersey.

“It’s a lot to take in when you’re there,” says Scratch of the Persian Gulf city, known for its modern architectural extravagance and nightlife opulence, where he was asked to perform at last year. “It’s hard to take it all in. I was supposed to be there for three days, and I spent three weeks.”

Read the full article here.

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